Originally posted by Maclintick
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Charles Ives (1874-1954): 14-18/10/24
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
Indeed! Thank you Maclintick for finding that.
Revisted the Concord Sonata last night, and was bowled over again by the sheer exuberant inventiveness of the piece. Ives was obviously familiar with Debussy’s pianistic oeuvre, but of course takes off in his own direction.
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Maclintock
I found a really interesting article on line by jazz pianist Ethan Iveson who proposed a number of records where Ives's music could be perceived as an influence on musicians as diverse as Keith Jarrett, Paul Motian, Bill Frisell and Albert Ayler. All of these musicians have cited the influence of Ives.
What I cannot find is anything where Ives offered an opinion on jazz. This is what fascinates me. Not aware of his offering favourable opinions as was the case with Ravel, Milhaud , Martinu or Reich. Just curious to see how aware he was of jazz. I am guessing he was not a fan.
To pick up Richard's salient comment about Hip Hop, i would agree that this is a distinct social / popular form of music which owes it's roots to US. However, I feel the Blues are perhaps a better example and another significant achievement in Anerican music.
I cannot really subscribe to any idea that classical music can be taken in isolation these days. Since the introduction of gramophone recordings it us very much a mixing pot . Jazz has had a big role to play in classical music and even Ives was aware of composers like Stephen Foster.
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Originally posted by Ian Thumwood View PostThe American Brahms ?
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Originally posted by Ian Thumwood View PostMaclintock
I found a really interesting article on line by jazz pianist Ethan Iveson who proposed a number of records where Ives's music could be perceived as an influence on musicians as diverse as Keith Jarrett, Paul Motian, Bill Frisell and Albert Ayler. All of these musicians have cited the influence of Ives.
What I cannot find is anything where Ives offered an opinion on jazz. This is what fascinates me. Not aware of his offering favourable opinions as was the case with Ravel, Milhaud , Martinu or Reich. Just curious to see how aware he was of jazz. I am guessing he was not a fan.
Ives was a complicated character, with paradoxical sides to a nature shaped by the Emersonian tenets of freedom and original thinking. He had a pathological aversion to being photographed, and refused to own a radio or a phonograph, as if these modern distractions would compromise his adherence to Danbury values and the world of childhood to which he clung tenaciously. Without a phonograph, opportunities for experiencing ragtime or early jazz would be scarce. An intriguing paradox is that he regarded spontaneity and improvisation, the twin pillars of jazz, in performances of his music as absolutely paramount, becoming annoyed when asked why he never played a piece in the same way twice, or even as it was written on the page. In notation of his manuscripts, he omitted barlines where he could get away with it, to the discomfiture of performers such as John Kirkpatrick who needed the crutch of metrical exactitude, and re-barred the Concord Sonata accordingly. The jazz musicians you mention obviously see in Ives a kindred spirit in freedom and spontaneity of expression.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post
I discovered Fischer-Dieskau . . . his Ives album, released in 1976 and recently re-issued. I have just belatedly caught up with it via Spotify.
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostAn intriguing paradox is that he regarded spontaneity and improvisation, the twin pillars of jazz, in performances of his music as absolutely paramount, becoming annoyed when asked why he never played a piece in the same way twice, or even as it was written on the page . . . The jazz musicians you mention obviously see in Ives a kindred spirit in freedom and spontaneity of expression.
I now rest assured.
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Originally posted by Padraig View Post
Thank you for that explanation, Maclintick. What with hymns,spirituals, street music and marching bands etc appearing in his music, I too found it puzzling that jazz was not instantly apparent.
I now rest assured.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostWell, lots of people listen to classical music to the exclusion of other genres, and some even compose it without reference to other genres, so when you say it cannot be taken in isolation,are you suggesting that it is impossible to do so or that it is morally-reprehensible?
I dont think this statement is true. Pick up any music by Bach and he is utilising the popular dances of his day. Even Beethoven composed variations on unlikely popular tunes including Scottish themes.
If you move into the late 19th and early 20th century many composers were heavily influenced by folk music. By 1920s Milhaud and Martinu were checking out jazz and later composers such as Steve Reich got inspiration from the likes of John Coltrane. More contemporary composers have been influenced by advances in technology. Classical music rarely operates in a vacuum.
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From the age of mif 40s to 80 Ives could have checked out jazz from King Oliver through to Charlie Parker. I think the ambivalence towards records and the radio would have made it difficult for him to hear jazz. Seems from.the fascinating post earlier that he never encountered jazz.
Funny how this happens. Messaien has probably been the most influential composer on jazz post war but he hated jazz with a passion.
The Iveson article is interesting. Surprised by Jarrett's enthusiasm for Ives.
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Originally posted by Ian Thumwood View Post
Smittims
I dont think this statement is true. Pick up any music by Bach and he is utilising the popular dances of his day. Even Beethoven composed variations on unlikely popular tunes including Scottish themes.
If you move into the late 19th and early 20th century many composers were heavily influenced by folk music. By 1920s Milhaud and Martinu were checking out jazz and later composers such as Steve Reich got inspiration from the likes of John Coltrane. More contemporary composers have been influenced by advances in technology. Classical music rarely operates in a vacuum.
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